Showing posts with label paper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paper. Show all posts

Monday, January 8, 2018

1/8/18 Report - What Pirates Read. Story of a Medieval Norse Penny Found In Maine.


Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of treasurebeachesreport.blogspot.com.

Scrap of Paper Recovered from Queen Annes Revenge
Source: Salisbury Post (See link below)


What did Blackbeard's pirates read?  You might be surprised if he read at all, but small scraps of paper including the one shown above was recovered from the Queen Anne's Revenge and identified as being from“A Voyage to the South Sea, and Round the World, Perform’d in the Years 1708, 1709, 1710 and 1711” by Captain Edward Cooke.  I imagine the book might have been a very useful resource for seamen of the day.  And maybe they just liked to read the same type of things we read today.


Here is a bit of the article.


...During conservation work on artifacts recovered from the wreckage of Queen Anne’s Revenge — the flagship of the pirate Blackbeard — 16 tiny fragments of paper were discovered in a mass of wet sludge removed from the chamber for a breech-loading cannon.

The largest fragment was only about the size of a quarter. Paper is an extremely rare material to find on shipwrecks, especially one 300 years old, because it usually disintegrates quickly under water...
And here is the link.

http://www.salisburypost.com/2018/01/04/scraps-of-paper-found-on-queen-annes-revenge/

Fascinating that something so fragile not only survived but could be identified as being from a specific book!

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Richard H. sent me the following link to an article about a medieval Norse penny found in Maine that may be evidence of a Norse settlement that would be much older than the Spanish New World.

Here is an excerpt.

...After Mellgren’s coin was identified as Norse, the Maine State Museum sent a team of professional archaeologists to the Goddard Site to better understand the context the coin had come from. While no other Norse artifact has ever been found there, the site did hold surprises—artifacts attesting to an explosion of trade contact between Native American groups, stretching from the eastern Great Lakes up to Labrador. At the same time the coin shows up, for instance, archery first appears in the region.

“The site has an unspeakably dense concentration of archers,” says Bourque. Excavations have turned up thousands of arrowheads, along with mounds of pottery sherds and stones that come from hundreds of miles away. “It’s off the charts,” he says. “The real mystery is—what the hell is going on at the site at the time?”

To Bourque, the coin is a clue in this other mystery. All sorts of objects that seem out of place in 12th-century Maine show up in this one spot, as if it were site of a pre-Columbian World’s Fair for northeastern coastal America, from Lake Erie to Newfoundland. Unlike the sagas—all story, little evidence—this site is full of interesting evidence in search of a story.


And here is the link.

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/maine-norse-penny-archaeology-vikings-north-america

Richard H. included the following interesting postscript with his email. Samuel Harding, 1683-1733 is my 6th Great Grandfather and first to pillage the pirate ship WHYDAH ashore on Cape Cod's Nauset Beach, 


Thanks Richard.  That's an interesting bit of ancestry.

I encourage everybody to research their ancestry.  It really makes history come alive.

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The Treeasure Coast surf is predicted to be around four to six feet today.  The wind is from the east.  It was foggy again this morning.  The tides are not as big as they were a few days ago.

Happy hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net

Thursday, September 8, 2016

9/8/16 Report - 18 Ounce Gold Nugget Found. A New Tropical Disturbance In The Atlantic. Remarkable Artifact of Twin Towers.


Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of treasurebeachesreport.blogspot.com.

Two Atlantic Disturbances
Source: nhc.nooa.gov
Summer is past but hurricane season isn't over.  According to Noaa, from mid-August through mid-October, the activity spikes, accounting for 78 percent of the tropical storm days, 87 percent of the category 1 and 2 hurricane days, and a whopping 96 percent of the major (category 3, 4 and 5) hurricane days.

In addition to hurricanes we often get some good storms in the fall.  I remember some in both October and November.  November to February is often a good period for storms and beach detecting.

The surfing web sites are predicting a surf no higher than two feet for the next week or so on the Treasure Coast.

As you can see from the map above, we now have a new tropical disturbance by the West Indies.

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A California prospector found a rare gold nugget that could be worth more than $70,000.

Oscar Espinoza, of Modesto, told Gold Prospecting Adventures he'd been searching in nearby Woodscreek when he found the t-bone steak-sized nugget...

Espinoza found the 18-ounce nugget on Tuesday in Jamestown, California, which is now expecting a modern day gold rush.


Prospector Showing 18 Oz. Nugget In
Unique Manner.
Here is the link for more about that.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3777145/Prospector-finds-steak-sized-gold-nugget-worth-70-000-California-town-prepares-gold-rush.html

Thanks to Dean for sending me this link.
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Here is remarkable bit of paper stuck to a piece of steel at the site where the Twin Towers fell.

Bible Pages Fused To Steel Survive Twin Towers Disaster.

http://spiritdaily.org/blog/uncategorized/a-remarkable-scrap-of-paper


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Notice the list of popular posts that I listed on the main page.  You might want to visit some of those if you missed them or revisit them.


In some cases, the farther you get from your childhood, the more clearly you see it.


I don't have much time today, so that is about it.

Happy hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net